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Restoration of the Canal |
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of all the canal needed to be saved The years immediately after the second world war were momentous days for the survival of the Kennet & Avon Canal. Officialdom saw the canals as an antiquated transport system which had outlived its usefulness, and was a drain on the public purse. |
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| In June 1962 the Association acquired
charitable status and became the Kennet and Avon Canal Trust. This was an
important step as it allowed the Trust then to issue appeals and raise funds
more effectively and the aim became the restoration of navigation.
Then came the real turning point. The Transport Act of 1962 transferred the waterways from British Transport Commission to a new administration - BRITISH WATERWAYS BOARD. Here at last was an organisation prepared to listen and from this point on serious work could be undertaken on restoration. |
| The restoration starts, it's a mammoth task |
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The task -
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| During the late sixties and the seventies the outline restoration strategy was to link the Reading and Newbury Cruiseways, extend the Avon cruiseway eastwards and concentrate on the bit in the middle especially the Long Pound Devizes to Wootton Rivers. |
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Everyone was working towards the opening on August 8th 1990 by Her Majesty the Queen. The Rose of Hungerford bore the Queen through one of the locks and the boat broke the tape to open the canal. |
| The canal was officially opened in 1990 but that was not the end of the story. |
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